What's
New @ Ramsar
1
September 2003![]()
Headline
story. Three sites in Ukraine removed from
the Montreux Record. The Ramsar Bureau is happy to announce that
the Ukrainian Ramsar Sites Karkinitska and Dzharylgatska
Bays, Tendrivska Bay and Yagorlytska
Bay, at the request of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources
and in consultation with the Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP), have
now been removed from the Montreux Record of Ramsar sites where changes in ecological
character have occurred, are occurring or are likely to occur, established through
Resolution IV.8 during COP4 (1990). In 1996, COP6 adopted Resolution VI.1 which
provides in its Annex "Working definitions, guidelines for describing and
maintaining the ecological character of listed sites, and guidelines for operation
of the Montreux Record". The latter asks Contracting Parties to submit
information, according to a specific "Montreux Record-Questionnaire",
for assessing possible inclusion or removal of a listed site from the Montreux
Record. This procedure has now been completed by Ukrainian authorities and the
three sites have been removed as of 29 August 2003. More
details about the sites and the steps that have been taken are available here.
[01/09/03]
Headline
story.
Improved Web site for LakeNet.
Lisa Borre writes: "On behalf of the LakeNet Secretariat, I invite
you to preview recent improvements to our website at http://www.worldlakes.org.
The new and improved website is the culmination of five years of information
collection about lakes and their management which is now part of a searchable,
online database. We hope it provides more and better information in an easier
to use format and serves as a catalyst for effective work to protect and restore
the health of lakes throughout the world. . . . Improvements to the website
and information management system were made possible with grants from the United
States Agency for International Development and the Global Environment
Facility and with the cooperation of the International Lake Environment
Committee (ILEC) in Japan and Saint Michael's College in Vermont. The website
is still a work in progress and other features will be added in the coming weeks,
including a universal search, program updates and online forms to send us information.
As always, we welcome your feedback and encourage you to send us information
for inclusion on the website or to participate in LakeNet's e-Forum by sending
a message to mailto:info@worldlakes.org
or by posting a message to the group at: mailto:lakenet@yahoogroups.com."
More details here. [01/09/03]
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| Ramsar Trivia: How many Wetland Persons of International Importance are there? Answer. |
Who's where?
Gordana
Beltram (Slovenia), Chair of the Ramsar Standing Committee, is visiting
the Bureau today, 1 September 2003, for discussions with the Secretary General,
Peter Bridgewater. [01/09/03]
Margarita
Astrálaga, Regional Coordinator for the Americas, is in Habana,
Cuba, for the 6th session of the Conference of the Parties to the
UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD),
through to 5 September 2003. [29/08/03]
Guangchun
Lei, Regional Coordinator for Asia, and his Assistant Liazzat Rabbiosi
are in Kathmandu,
Nepal, organizing the Ramsar workshop on "Wetland Conservation
and Wise Use in the Himalaya High Mountains" with WWF International and
ICIMOD, 30-31 August 2003. [01/09/03]
Montse
Riera is in Durban, South Africa, seconded
to IUCN to help set up and run registration for the World Parks Congress,
8-17 September 2003. [01/09/03]
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Worthy
examples for Ramsar Site Designators -- Reprints
of the original Ramsar Information Sheets for Albania's Butrint
(2003) and Malaysia's Tanjung Piai
(2003). [22/08/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Query on habitat zoning
in Ramsar sites. Russell Seaman
writes: "Dear Forum members, During 2002 and 2003 the Department for Environment
and Heritage in South Australia, Australia, has undertaken a project to classify
and map location of habitats within the Lower Lakes
and Coorong Ramsar area. A habitat mapping report will be available
via the Web in the future. The next stage of this project is to develop a habitat-zoning
plan. In developing the zoning plan the information collected during the first
project stage will be consolidated and analysed. By using GIS analysis, a series
of habitat zones will be developed and then compared against existing State
and local government planning zones, structures, regulations and policies. Through
this process, identification of planning compatibilities and conflicts can be
analysed against the Ramsar habitat zones and recommendations provided for improvements
in planning at a State and local government level. I am currently undertaking
background research into the South Australian planning system, and land use
planning in general. I would be interested if any Forum members have undertaken
similar projects, any references or comments would be most appreciated. Regards,
Russell Seaman, Ramsar Habitat Investigation Officer, Conservation Strategies,
Regional Services, South East Department for Environment and Heritage PO Box
314, Goolwa SA , e-mail: seaman.russell@saugov.gov.sa.au.
[29/08/03]
Ramsar
Coordinator for Africa exits in a decorous manner. Mr Anada
Tiéga, the Ramsar Bureau's high-performance Coordinator for
Africa, is leaving the secretariat after more than six years in the saddle,
bound for new horizons (well, familiar horizons) as project manager for a GEF
project for the Lake Chad Basin (details
here). What
could be more fitting than that, in the venerable tradition of Ramsar Bureau
regional dinners, an "Africa night" should occur just as Mr Tiéga
is flitting out the door with a dignified, gentlemanly wave. On 22 August
2003, Ramsar Bureau staff and friends gathered in Signy, many wearing African
or faux-African garb, to devour African cuisine and bid farewell to Anada Tiéga
and his family. Join in. [29/08/03]
Abou Bamba selected to succeed Anada Tiéga. The
Ramsar Bureau is delighted to announce that, from a short-listed field of exceptional
candidates, Mr Abou Bamba from Côte
d'Ivoire has been offered and has accepted the position of Regional Coordinator
for Africa, succeeding Mr Anada Tiéga. Mr Bamba has been working
most recently with the Network for Environment and Sustainable Development in
Africa (NESDA) since 1998; first as Program Officer and Acting Coordinator,
since 2001 as Coordinator. It is planned that he will enter the Convention's
employment two weeks before the Ramsar Meeting of African
Parliamentarians, to be held in Benin at the end of November 2003,
working from Abidjan and then at the meeting before joining the Bureau in Gland,
Switzerland, at the beginning of December. Here
is a brief biographical summary of Mr Bamba's educational background and areas
of work experience, prepared by Annette Keller, the Bureau's Administration
Coordinator. [26/08/03] [français]
[español]
Philip
Weller named head of ICPDR. The Ramsar Bureau is particularly happy
to welcome Philip Weller as the new Executive Secretary of the International
Commission for the Protection of the Danube River. As the former director of
WWF's Danube-Carpathian Programme, Philip was instrumental in forging close
links among the 13 Danub
e
catchment basin states and the European Commission that are parties to the Danube
River Protection Convention, of which ICPDR is the operative arm. Philip was
the driving force behind the Lower Danube Green Corridor
Agreement (of which the Ramsar Bureau is a depository), signed in
2000 by Bulgaria, the Republic of Moldova, Romania, and Ukraine, establishing
the largest transboundary wetland protection and restoration initiative in Europe.
Philip, together with his former colleagues of WWF and three national NGOs in
Austria, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, received a Ramsar
Award in 2002 for the preparation of the transboundary
Morava-Diye floodplain Ramsar platform and conservation initiative.
Here are brief press releases from
Ramsar's Tobias Salathé and from the UN Information Service,
with a photo of Philip Weller in at the UN offices in Vienna with his predecessor,
Joachim Bendow. [25/08/03]
Vacancy
announcement. WWF Chair in Freshwater Ecosystems,
UNESCO-IHE. The mission of UNESCO-IHE is to contribute to the education
and training of capable professionals, carry out research, and build the capacity
of knowledge centres and other organizations in the fields of water, the environment
and infrastructure in developing countries and countries in transition. The
IHE's Department of Environmental Resources provides post-graduate education
and training to professionals in the fields of environmental science, technology,
planning and management, and carries out research and capacity building projects
in these areas. The main fields of attention within the department are: wetland
ecosystems, pollution prevention and control, and the dynamics of environmental
systems. In partnership with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), UNESCO-IHE
has recently established the WWF Chair in the Wise
Use of Freshwater Ecosystems to advance research and training on
solutions for the interconnected issues of water management, sustainable development,
poverty reduction and ecosystem conservation. A vacancy announcement has been
posted for the: WWF Chair, Professor in Freshwater
Ecosystems and can be viewed here. [link
later removed] [25/08/03]
Slovenia
joins AEWA. Bert Lenten, Executive Secretary
of AEWA in Bonn (aewa@unep.dc, http://www.unep-aewa.org) reports: "On 23rd
of July 2003 Slovenia deposited its instrument of accession to the Agreement
on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA), and Slovenia
will become as of 1 October 2003 the 41st Contracting Party to AEWA. Slovenia
has a short coastal strip on the Adriatic Sea, an alpine mountain region adjacent
to Italy and Austria, mixed mountains and valleys with numerous rivers to the
east. Despite its small extent covering only 20,256 km2, Slovenia has a rich
biodiversity. Regularly a total of 103 species of birds of European concern
breed in Slovenia, amongst others e.g. the Corn Crake (Crex crex). The
minimum total population of this AEWA species in Slovenia is estimated at 500
calling males. The UNEP/ AEWA Secretariat welcomes Slovenia in the AEWA family
and looks forward to a fruitful cooperation." [25/08/03]
10th
WATC wetland management course under way. Ramsar's
Tobias Salathé represented the Ramsar Bureau at the opening
ceremony of the 10th International Course on Wetland
Management run by the Dutch Water Management Agency's (RIZA) Wetland
Advisory and Training Centre (WATC) in Lelystad. This edition of the course
is likely to be a very successful one, based on the long experience accumulated
by RIZA staff and course consultants over the past ten years, and this year's
group of participants is particularly promising, wetland managers, reserve administrators,
NGO educators and CEPA people, and others from Brazil (2), Bulgaria (1), China
(2), Georgia (1), India (2), Lithuania (1), Mongolia (1), Philippines (3), Russia
(2), Senegal (1), Switzerland (1), Turkey (1), and Ukraine (2). The
good news is that this course stands as
an international reference for wetland training in Ramsar principles and practice,
and has been improved ever since its first edition ten years ago. The
bad news is that, as a result of shifting
priorities within the government, this will probably be the last year for the
successful International Course on Wetland Management. Here's
more detail and a few photos. [22/08/03]
Announcement.
Wetland Conservation Policy: Examples and Progress on the
World Scene -- An Open Invitation to Submit Papers for a special
session during the INTECOL VII International Wetlands Conference, Utrecht, The
Netherlands, July 25-30, 2004. Organizer: Clayton
Rubec, Canadian Wildlife Service, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Canada.
E-mail: clay.rubec@ec.gc.ca.
Phone: 1-819-953-0485. "Wetland Policy is one of the key instruments that
nations can use to assist in implementing the wise use of wetlands and is a
cornerstone of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. The Convention adopted
Guidelines for the Development and Implementation of National Wetland Policies
in 1999 and has published this as part of the Ramsar Toolkit Series. Many countries
are making progress in planning and delivering such policies or strategies and
update reports have become standard information at Ramsar meetings of the Contracting
Parties. However, an in-depth look at experience in applying these Guidelines
and in understanding their utility as well as development of further actions
to foster national wetland policies and strategies is essential. Colleagues
with experience in leading forward policy initiatives and in their implementation,
particularly where the Ramsar Guidelines have been used, are invited to contribute
and present a paper in this Special Session during the INTECOL VII Wetlands
Conference next year. A maximum of 10 papers will be accepted with an objective
that they be gathered and edited for publication. Clayton Rubec of Canada, acting
as the organizer of this session, invites you to contact him directly and be
prepared to submit an abstract through the conference web server (www.bio.uu.nl/INTECOL)."
[21/08/03]
'Flow:
the essentials of environmental flows'. IUCN and its Water
and Nature Initiative have published a very handy new guide to "environmental
flows" -- the "water regimes provided within a river, wetland or coastal
zone to maintain ecosystems and their benefits where there are competing water
uses and where flows are regulated". Flow
has been edited by Megan Dyson, Ger Bergkamp, and John Scanlon and includes
a chapter on international legal instruments, including the Ramsar Convention,
by Alejandro Iza and John Scanlon of the IUCN Environmental Law Centre in Bonn,
with research assistance by Angela Casser, a recent ELC intern and Ramsar Bureau
sort-of-intern. Mike Acreman (co-author of the Ramsar book Economic Valuation
of Wetlands) is lead author for the chapter on "Defining Water Requirements"
and assisted with the chapter on "Building Capacity". Here
you will find a launch press release by Elroy
Bos of IUCN as well as a link to opportunities to download a 1.3MB
PDF version of the book and/or to order the hardcopy version from the IUCN Publication
Services Unit in Cambridge, UK, for 30 Euros. [20/08/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum - new Web site on catchment management for upcoming
WPC. "Dear Forum members - those interested in the topic of
managing catchment or river basins, and in particular how to integrate 'protected
areas' into these approaches, may be interested in one of the workshop sessions
that will be held at the upcoming World Parks Congress in Durban, South
Africa (8-17 September). One stream of the Congress is looking at Linkages
in the landscape/seasape for which the lead organiser is Dr Peter Bridgewater
(formerly with UNESCO-MAB and now Secretary-General of the Ramsar Convention).
WWF's Living Waters Programme was invited to help bring together a workshop
under this stream to look in particular at The role of protected areas
in integrated catchment management. The programme is now in place and
abstracts are assembling, so to allow likely participants to get across the
issues we've set up a mini-web site http://www.mainstream.com.au/ParksCongress.htm.
The approach we plan to take is indicated in the running title given to the
session, From mountains to sea. For those
not going to Durban, we will give you feedback on this workshop afterwards.
Regards. Bill Phillips." Dr Bill Phillips, Director, MainStream Environmental
Consulting, Canberra, Australia (mainstream@mainstream.com.au; Web sites: www.mainstream.com.au
and www.wetlandshelp-line.com). [19/08/03]
Announcement.
I Curso Taller sobre Gestión de Humedales, Chetumal,
México, Septiembre 2003. Amigos del Manatí AC convoca
a su I Curso Taller sobre Gestión de Humedales próximo a realizarse
en la Cd. de Chetumal, Quintana Roo.
Mayores informes a leer la Convocatoria. [19/08/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Peatlands as Ramsar
sites. See some pertinent questions and useful replies from the Ramsar
Forum, 15-18 September, on how to identify, delimit, and designate peatlands
for the List of Wetlands of International Importance. Click
here. [19/08/03]
From the Ramsar Forum. Call for comments on Draft Code of Conduct on mangroves. Alfredo Quarto, Director of the Mangrove Action Project, will be attending the Workshop on Biodiversity Conservation and Management of Mangrove Ecosystems in Washington, D.C. (USA), 16-17 September 2003, and has posted to the Ramsar Forum a request for comments on the text to be discussed there, the Draft Code of Conduct for the Sustainable Management of Mangrove Ecosystems, prepared for the World Bank by the Centre for Tropical Ecosystems Research (cenTER), University of Aarhus, Denmark, and the International Society for Mangrove Ecosystems (ISME). Alfredo's message is available here, inviting comments either to him to be communicated to the workshop or directly to Mr Ron Zwieg of the World Bank. The Draft Code is a 1.7 megabyte PDF file which can be downloaded here. [since removed] [18/08/03]
Upcoming
meetings. IV International Wetlands Symposium,
Zapata Wetlands, Matanzas, Cuba, 3-11 October 2003 : "The Conservation
and Sustainable Use of Wetlands in next millennium". Sponsors: Ramsar Convention,
(CITMA) Cuban Ministry of Science, Technology, and Environment, (CNAP) Cuban
National Center for Protected Areas, Cuban Hydraulic Society. Thematic areas
of the conference: National Policies, Planning and management of wetlands, Economic
evaluation of wetlands, Communication, education, and public knowledge, Impact
of the international cooperation in the management and sustainable use of wetlands.
Further information from Alain Lambert, lambert@ramsar.org. [18/08/03]
The
10th Anniversary of the Ramsar COP5, Kushiro Conference -- International Workshop
on Wise Use of Lagoon Wetlands, 23-25 July 2003. A workshop was held
to provide an opportunity to learn, exchange ideas, and explore the solution
for the conservation, restoration, and wise use of the lagoon wetlands in Asia
including Japan, as well as aiming at expanding the network among researchers,
NGO staffs, and governmental officials who cope with these issues nationally
and internationally. The Organizing Committee was comprised of Kushiro International
Wetland Centre, Foundation of Hokkaido River Disaster Prevention Research Centre,
Hokkaido Development Engineering Centre, and Ramsar Center Japan. Some Anatidae
Network Sites and from other key sites for Anatidae in Japan also joined. Hopefully,
more details on the workshop will follow here soon. For further information
in the meantime, contact: Ms. Reiko Nakamura ramsarcj.nakamura@nifty.ne.jp,
Ramsar Center Japan. [18/08/03]
China
holds training course on monitoring of Ramsar sites. Bao
Daming of the State Forestry Administration, the Convention's Administrative
Authority in the People Republic of China, has reported on a recent training
workshop held for managers and technical workers in China's 20 Ramsar sites.
Here is the brief summary, with a
few photos. [14/08/03]
Iran
re-routes highway to preserve Anzali Mordab Ramsar site. Dr.
Massoumeh Ebtekar, Vice President and Head of the Department of the
Environment (DOE) of the Islamic Republic of Iran, has informed the Ramsar Bureau
on 11 August 2003 about some recent achievements in the conservation and wise
use of wetlands in her country. The Anzali Mordab (Talab)
Complex in Gilan province is a large and scenic wetland with significant
biodiversity. In recognition of its importance the site was designated as a
Wetland of International Importance in 1975 - one of the first Ramsar sites
- and added to the Montreux Record in 1993. In recent years road construction
was undertaken in the area, with plans to route part of it though particularly
sensitive areas of the wetland. Due to a likely adverse environmental impact
on the wetland, this road-building project has now been stopped. The Government
of Iran, with the full support of the President, has approved the recommendation
of the DOE to create a detour, and the budget necessary for this re-routing
will be provided by the Ministry of Roads and Transportation. Remaining parts
of the new road will be constructed in line with environmental regulations and
best practice. The DOE has initiated a comprehensive plan for protection and
management of this wetland, located on the Caspian coast, which is being supported
by the Japan International Cooperation Agency. According to government officials,
these measures will ensure the conservation and wise use of the wetland in accordance
with the principles of the Ramsar Convention. [13/08/03]
Conservation
Finance Alliance. IUCN has recently reported: "The most recent
credible estimate of the total annual costs to operate an effective, representative
global protected areas system is US $45 billion, yet current expenditures to
manage the existing global protected areas network are estimated at US $6.5
billion. The quantum leap required to attain a level of funding sufficient to
ensure a sustainable future and halt global biodiversity loss has driven 19
institutions, including IUCN and the Ramsar Convention, to establish the Conservation
Finance Alliance (CFA). The Alliance strives to accelerate the delivery
of conservation finance solutions by collaborating in areas where working together
is more effective than working alone. The CFA will catalyze increased and sustainable
public and private financing for large-scale biodiversity conservation efforts,
including Multilateral Environment Agreements such as the Convention on Biological
Diversity and the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. Financing is also an issue
that will be debated at the upcoming 5th IUCN World Parks Congress to be held
in South Africa in September." Ramsar's Alain Lambert is Chair of
the CFA, and present members include The Nature Conservancy, USAID, Ramsar,
RedLac, the Wildlife Conservation Society, WWF, Conservation International,
Germany's GTZ, the UN Development Programme, and the National Parks Conservation
Association. A PDF version of the CFA's brochure is available on the IUCN Web
site, http://www.iucn.org/info_and_news/press/cfabrochure.pdf,
and the CFA Web site, hosted by the Wildlife Conservation Society, can be seen
at http://www.conservationfinance.org/.
(12/08/03)
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News from the SGF. Belarus, Lithuania and Russia complete transfrontier wetland project. The Small Grants Fund 2001 "Inventory of important transfrontier wetlands in Belarus, Kaliningrad Region of Russia and Lithuania" is the second part of a two-year project launched by OMPO (Migratory Birds of the Western Palearctic), an environmental NGO which develops programmes for the conservation of African-Eurasian migratory birds and their habitats. A detailed inventory using the Ramsar criteria and classification of 11 important transboundary wetlands (total area over 100,000 ha) was performed -- seven wetlands shared by Lithuania and Belarus and four shared by Lithuania and the Kaliningrad Region of Russia. For each of them, a complete Ramsar Information Sheet was prepared. Ramsar's Estelle Gironnet provides more details on the projects, the sites, and the prospects for the future, with some excellent photographs supplied by Dr. Saulius Svazas, program coordinator OMPO/Vilnius, Lithuanian Institute of Ecology. [12/08/03]
SGF
emergency project for fire prevention in Costa Rica Ramsar site
[Proyecto de emergencia
del FPS para prevención de incendios en sitio Ramsar de Costa Rica].
Caño Negro Ramsar site in Costa Rica, a shallow freshwater lagoon near
the Nicaraguan border, surrounded by seasonally inundated marshes and woodland,
has suffered from the effect of serious forest fires, especially during El Niño
years, worsened by the tradition of burning fields by local farmers. Early in
2003, 4,000 ha were scorched by flames. This emergency has overstretched the
available equipment and personnel, so urgent action is needed to implement a
forest fire prevention and control strategy for the site. The Small Grants Fund
is funding an emergency project there with 13,500 Swiss francs to carry out
an Environmental Impact Assessment of fires in the area, create fire brigades
from local dwellers for fire management and control, improve infrastructure
and acquire fire fighting equipment, and implement an environmental education
campaign about the wise use of wetlands. The project, starting in August-September
2003, will be undertaken by administrators of the Caño Negro National
Wildlife Refuge. -- reported by Iván Dario Valencia.
[11/08/03] [español]
Anada
Tiéga's farewell and next assignment. The Ramsar Bureau's
Regional Coordinator for Africa is leaving the Convention's direct employment
at the end of this month and moving on to manage a GEF project that will allow
him to continue some of the most important work that he has been developing
in recent years for Ramsar. As project manager of the Reversal
of Land and Water Degradation Trends In the Lake Chad Basin Ecosystem
project, he expects to be well placed to ensure that Ramsar principles and practices
are fully embodied in the continuing transboundary cooperation amongst the members
of the Lake Chad Basin Commission. Here
is his brief message of farewell and description of his new post. [11/08/03]
Ramsar
Bureau says goodbye to departing Secretary General and eats a ton of seafood
in a wok. Following a dizzying round of farewell parties and extravagant
testimonials to Delmar Blasco's eight-years'
tenure as Secretary General, the staff of the Ramsar Bureau were feeling left
out and pondered amongst themselves how best to commemorate this milestone of
the Convention in a fashion that would be, not only suitable and tasteful, but
also far more spectacular than the champagne-charged testimonials of other nations
and organizations. Briefly, there was a sense of insignificance and despair,
but the Ramsar Bureau has a secret weapon. Namely, Carlos
Villalba (seconded by the Spanish Government, luckily right now when
we needed him most), who can do wonders with layout in next to no time, and
kaboom! we were away. Here are discreet
photos of the Bureau's paella party for Delmar Blasco and a few glimpses of
the book of mementos presented to him to, in some cases, his good-natured embarrassment.
And views of the seafood as well! Click
here and enter another world, however briefly. [07/08/03]
Equatorial
Guinea joins the Convention as its 138th Contracting Party. The Ramsar
Bureau is very pleased to announce that the Republic of Equatorial Guinea has
completed the accession process, as of 2 June 2003, and UNESCO has informed
the secretariat that the Convention on Wetlands, as amended in 1982 and 1987,
will enter into force for Equatorial Guinea on 2 October 2003. The new Party
has designated three Ramsar sites at the time of accession, though details about
them are presently rather sketchy. The territory of Equatorial Guinea comprises
the mainland area of Río Muni bordering Cameroon and Gabon, the island
of Bioko in the Bight of Biafra, where lies the capital city Malabo, and several
other smaller islands in the Gulf of Guinea, some quite distant from the coast.
Two of the three new Ramsar sites are located at the northern and southern extremes
of the mainland, and the third is not part of the mainland at all -- The Isla
de Annobón, which lies some 350km off the coast, is a small island
of some 7km by 3km with touristic importance, all or some of which has been
designated as a Nature Reserve for its large numbers of migratory birds and
important vascular plants. The Reserva Natural del Estuario del Muni (80,000
hectares) in the mainland south is an area of estuaries and near-coastal highlands
characterized by dense forest, inundated forest, and peat meadows; Río
Ntem o Campo is a Nature Reserve along the Ntem river, which forms the frontier
with Cameroon in the nation's north. The Bureau's African regional team will
very soon be following up with authorities in the new Party to establish the
information about these sites that is required by Resolutions of the Conference
of the Parties, but here
is what is known about them at the present time. The Convention on Wetlands
extends its warm welcome to Equatorial Guinea as it joins the Ramsar family.
[06/08/03] [français]
[español]
Technical
manual for sampling water quality at Ramsar sites [version
en español]. Numerous Resolutions and Recommendations
of the Convention have called for greater technical attention by the Parties
to the quantity and quality of the water associated with wetlands. In particular,
Resolution VII.25 (1999) on Measuring environmental quality in wetlands
requested the Contracting Parties to intensify studies on the presence and significance
of toxic substances in the water, sediments and biota of wetlands. Now
SEHUMED, the Sede para el Estudio de los Humedales Mediterráneos
(the "Seat" for the Study of Mediterranean Wetlands) at the University
of Valencia, has produced a succinct and practical text the purpose of which
is to provide a technical review of methods for carrying out such sampling and
making biological, physical and chemical determinations. Recommendations
for sampling water, biota and bottom sediments in Ramsar wetlands
/ Recomendaciones para la toma de muestras de agua,
biota y sedimentos en humedales Ramsar is a 226-page illustrated
softcover volume that includes both the Spanish original and English translation
- it was prepared primarily by Drs Enrique Andreu Moliner
and Antonio Camacho González,
with the collaboration of Spanish academic colleagues, and published on behalf
of SEHUMED, MEDWET, and the Ramsar Convention by the Dirección General
de Conservación de la Naturaleza (DGCN) of Spain's Ministerio de Medio
Ambiente in Madrid. It includes prefatory words by DGCN director Inés
González Doncel and Ramsar's Delmar Blasco and covers a full
range of technical aspects of water sampling techniques and chain of custody,
sampling of organisms and ecotoxicity, and dealing with muds and sediments.
Inés' and Delmar's prefaces
can be viewed here, and the book itself can be ordered free of charge
from the Ramsar Bureau by requesting it from Valerie
Higgins (higgins@ramsar.org)
- of course, it's August in Europe, so one must be patient whilst awaiting the
book's arrival. [05/08/03] [version
en español]
Now
available. Summary of Ramsar COP8 from IUCN's
Environmental Law Programme. Dr
Alejandro O. Iza's brief article summarizing the results of Ramsar
Convention's 8th COP in November has been published in the IUCN's Environmental
Law Programme Newsletter. Dr Iza, of the Environmental Law Centre in
Bonn, approaches the strengths and weaknesses of the COP results from the point
of view of the international legal questions that were considered there, and
his short paper adds an interesting perspective. It
is reprinted here. [05/08/04]
New
addition to the Ramsar Sites Database Team. "Wetlands International
is delighted to welcome Karin Schneider von Deimling
who today joins the Ramsar Sites Database team in Wageningen as a Technical
Assistant. Karin, a German national, is a biologist/geographer by training,
with an MSc in remote sensing applied to water conservation, and previously
worked on technical and species databases supporting the Secretariat of the
Convention on Migratory Species, Bonn. The other members of the Ramsar Sites
Database Service are Ellen Dieme-Amting
and Dineke Beintema-Hietbrink, and we are
pleased to have a full strength team at a time when the Sites Database is undergoing
rapid and exciting changes." -- Doug Taylor, International Science Coordinator,
Wetlands International. [04/08/03]
Now
available. White Storks monitoring in Kenya.
In a project begun in 1997, the
Austrian Federal Ministry of Environment, Youth & Family and the
Provincial Government of Styria provided
financial assistance, through the Ramsar Convention Bureau, for the "Austrian-African
Migratory Birds Project", for research and monitoring of White Storks Ciconia
ciconia in Kenya and possibilities for site-twinning. Executed by staff
from the National Museums of Kenya, the Kenya Wildlife Service, and the East
African Wildlife Society, in the period 2002-2003 this project not only counted
41,000 wintering birds at 19 sites around the country, but also organized training
workshops and public awareness activities for local communities. The
report for September 2002-March 2003 is available here. [04/08/03]
Announcement.
Vacancy at World Conservation Monitoring
Centre in Cambridge. UNEP-WCMC have announced
a vacancy for a Senior Programme Officer, to be based in Cambridge, UK. The
announcement is available here [link
later removed] and expressions of interest should go to personnel@unep-wcmc.org.
[04/08/03]
New
Secretary General takes up the reins. Dr Peter Bridgewater today
assumes the post of Secretary General of the Convention. In a short message,
he has said: "I
am really pleased to be able to join the Convention at this important stage
in its development. As I write this, I am in Canberra, Australia, where parts
of the country are suffering from drought not seen for over 100 years. And it
is the same in Europe. As this is the International Year of Freshwater, these
events
assume
special meaning, and our Convention assumes a new role and new responsibilities.
Wetlands are key to conserving, purifying and providing water, as well as key
in conserving biodiversity and cultural diversity. The mutual
interactions between people and wetlands must become a focus for study, understanding
and action by the Convention in the next decade, as part of the global drive
to enhance our freshwater supplies.
To emphasise these issues I have provided the wetland image for this Web page (right), a painting by artist Robert Ingpen, using fine art drawings by Botanical artist Celia Rosser, of the Ramsar site known as Western Port Bay in Victoria, Australia. This picture illustrates the relationship between art, science and conservation, and underlines the need for effective communication and education about wetland issues. So, in the last months of the Year of Freshwater, think water, think wetlands, think wise use, think Ramsar!" Click here to see this image at a better size. [01/08/03]
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Valediction
from the Secretary General. On his last day as Secretary General
of the Convention on Wetlands, Delmar Blasco
has a brief farewell message for the Ramsar family.
You can find it here. [31/07/03]
Vacancy
announcement. Wetlands International seeking
new CEO. Wetlands International, an NGO with 19 offices worldwide,
over 140 staff, and an annual turnover of about €10 million, is seeking
a new CEO, to succeed Simon Nash. The postholder will be based in Wageningen,
The Netherlands, and is the chief managing officer, responsible to the Board
of Members. The CEO will be required to: manage the global organisation, including
responsibility for personnel, finances and budgets, fund raising, manage the
Netherlands office and support promotional and communication activities; support
the science-based program; support the Board of Directors; and represent the
organisation with members, partners, and intergovernmental bodies. The announcement
and terms of reference have been reprinted here [link
later removed] and can be seen on the Wetlands
International Web site as well. [31/07/03]
Visit
to Ramsar sites in Malaysia. During a recent visit to the region,
Ramsar's Regional Coordinator for Asia, Dr Guangchun Lei, took the opportunity
to visit recently designated Ramsar sites in Johor State in Malaysia, including
the southernmost point of mainland Asia. There he viewed the promising management
steps being taken and made several recommendations, and he urged his hosts to
place the Tanjung Piai site on the Montreux
Record so that expert advice could be sought to how to deal with increasing
erosion in just the past few months caused by wave action from new international
sea port nearby. Here is a brief report,
with photos. [31/07/03]
Algeria
designates 13 varied new Ramsar sites.
The Ministry
of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Ramsar Administrative Authority in
the Republic of Algeria, has newly designated 13 additional Wetlands of International
Importance. In studies assisted financially by the Living
Waters Programme of the Worldwide Fund
for
Nature (WWF International), the Ministry has presented well-researched Ramsar
Information Sheets on an array of wetland types in various parts of the country.
There are several "chotts" or seasonal salt lake/flats (we learn that
the word "chott" means "border" in Arabic, referring to
the vegetated ring surrounding the salt flat itself, which is properly called
a "sebkha"), mostly in the steppe area in the north of the country
between the northern and southern ranges of the Atlas mountains. We also have
a "gueltate", in Tamanrasset, one of the rocky terraced pool systems
found in the high mountains in the south, not unlike the fascinating Ramsar
site at Issakarassene. There is a karstic subterranean hydrological system,
Ghar Boumâaze, said to be the largest cavern network in Africa, with remarkable
flora and fauna both inside and out. And a classic set of oases, complete with
the fouggaras, those communal water-channeling system a thousand years old that
we learnt about from Algeria's
previous designations in February 2001. As well as a few lively pools
and marshes lying behind dune systems along the Mediterranean coast. And as
well as geothermal springs in the Ksour mountains into the bargain. Special
thanks have to go to the Algerian authority for these superb new designations,
particularly to Dr Ammar Boumezbeur who led the research efforts, as
well as to WWF International for the long involvement of the Living Waters Programme
in the safeguarding of these important North African sites. Brief
descriptions of the new sites can be found here.
Algeria now has 26 Ramsar sites, covering a surface area of 2,791,992 hectares, and boosts the Convention's totals to 1305 sites covering 110,028,570 ha. [29/07/03] [français et/y español]
Vacancy
announcement. IAIA -- Technical Programme Manager
(TPM) position. Call
for proposals for IAIA programme on capacity building for biodiversity in impact
assessment. Our colleagues at the International Association for
Impact Assessment (IAIA) are establishing a new programme on capacity building
for biodiversity in impact assessment and would like to receive proposals for
detailed development and delivery of the programme from candidates who would
be interested in the role of Technical Programme Manager (TPM) for this exciting
new initiative. The call for proposals is reprinted here [link
later removed], and the other relevant documents are procurable
on the IAIA's Web site, http://www.iaia.org.
[30/07/03]
More to follow. Watch this space.
Feedback and suggestions are welcome to: the Ramsar Convention Bureau,
Rue Mauverney 28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22
999 0169, e-mail
).
Updated regularly by Dwight Peck, Ramsar Bureau.
Back
Issues of the Bulletin Board. Early in every month, the current edition
of the Bulletin Board is copied to the Ramsar
Archives page, and you can dig through the back issues there --
their contents are still indexed on the Global
Index page in perpetuity.
visitors to this site since...... Wait . . . . . . Take a number and a plastic
chair -- we'll call you when there's room at the head of the queue.